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This resource is a schematic image for the filament winding manufacturing technique (Slide 4 of 6). The slides are adapted from the University of Liverpool "Composite Materials" lectures [MATS311] by Prof. W. Cantwell. Image courtesy UKCME, the University of Liverpool.

Tungsten Filament

 

Courtesy of Mr. MUHAMMET AYDIN

 

Image Details

Instrument used: Quanta SEM

Magnification: 800

Voltage: 5

Spot: 2,5

Working Distance: 8,5

Detector: etd

 

PLA Starfish, This was my fault, It just ran out of filament during the build! poor starfish.

I personally like it because of the dust on the bulb and the reflection of the filament in the glass at the top right ..

Lots of filaments today... They are of two types - thin and relatively short, with crisp outlines, or large and more cloud-like.

 

WARNING! Sun is dangerous, use proper filters for observing and imaging!

 

Aquisition time (start of the session) : JD2456745,89619213 (29.03.3014 13:30:31 MSK - this is my local noon time, highest elevation of the Sun above horizont).

Image orientation: totally scrambled

Equipment:

Canon EOS 60D (unmodded) coupled to Coronado PST via Baader Planetarium Hyperion Zoom 8-24 mm Mark III click-stop system eyepiece and Baader Planetarium M43-to-T2 conversion ring and mounted on SkyWatcher NEQ-6 PRo mount.

Aperture 40 mm

Native focal length 400 mm

Projection zoom setting: 16 mm

Effective focal length 900++ mm

Tv = 1/10 seconds

Av (effective) = NA

ISO 400

Exposures: 75% of 54

Processing: images were converted to monochrome and exported as 8-bit .TIFFs. Images were assembled into stack in ImageJ and saved as .AVI. AVI was processed in Autostakkert!2.

Resulting image was subjected to Richardson-Lucy deconvolution in AstraImage 3.0 (Cauchy type PSF, size 2,1 units, 8 iterations).

High-pass filtering and no coloration made in Photoshop.

Finally, Image was scaled down to have Solar disk diameter about 1500 pix.

 

Notes: tracking is good! 1/10th of second @ISO400 is much better than 1/50th @ISO1000.

Working on new filament packaging :-)

Field of microscopic filamentous microfossils inside a rounded concretion from the jasper rock in the Nuvvuagittuq Supracrustal Belt in Québec, Canada. The filaments are composed of haematite (red lines), and are located in a quartz layer (white) surrounded by magnetite (black), where both haematite and magnetite are iron oxide minerals. Photo by M. Dodd

Ptenothrix renateae

 

Complete with digital camo and purple cheek. My springtails are back at my door, but it seems that there are more of these than the Dicyrtomina ornata. Usually the Dicyrtomina outnumber these by a lot.

 

That pitted metal he's scaling is the hose hook-up part on a propane tank. I'm really happy with the quality of this shot. I was using the DCR-250; don't know what made it any better than previous shots with that lens.

7DoS "Lighting" "Macro Monday"

3D printer filament spool holder for MakerBot Replicator

 

Made on a makerbot.creativetools.se

Download the file for free from: www.thingiverse.com/thing:72746

Created with Apophysis

If you want to purchase best Abs filament or carbon filament at an affordable price visit us at www.3dfilament.supplies/abs/

3D printer filament spool holder for MakerBot Replicator

 

Made on a makerbot.creativetools.se

Download the file for free from: www.thingiverse.com/thing:72746

From Filament magazine Issue 1, available worldwide at www.filamentmagazine.com

 

Model: Steve Dyson

Photographer: Ara Maye McBay

Leafhopper nymph in full wax regalia...

essai d'impression 3d filament bois

Wow, I haven't been here in a loooooong time.

 

VS: Nude, mod by me

LS: Einfache, mod by me

Wallpaper: Filament

Foobar: Int, mod by me

Icons: Sanscons

Unfortunately I don't have elevator here and I live on 4th floor. Now please let me have my heart attack quietly :-D

It's a slow Friday, so I got the macro lens out....

Cooper River Bridge in Charleston SC

A huge filament I had the chance to image a few days earlier

It keep the same basic shape but developes nicely

 

To show how big is this filament I added Earth in scaled size.

 

Askar 185mm, Baader derf, Daystar Quark Chromosphere DS with Lunt 40, Player One Apollo 432

Architects: Rolfe Judd, 2015, showing part of the "stacked cuboids" 16-storey residential tower. The district used to be home to a gas mantle factory, hence the new development's name. London Borough of Wandsworth.

 

(CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

And then I had an idea....

 

This small accessory can protect your FFF 3D printer filament from two common issues - cleaning and lubrication.

 

A sponge wipes the filament clean from any dust particles and prevents them clogging the extruder.

 

By dropping a few drops of common mineral oil on the sponge the filament passing through gets lubricated thus relieving the extruder motor from strain.

 

Lubrication is specially useful if the filament needs to travel through long tubes before it enters the extruder.

 

INSTRUCTIONS

 

Download the STL-file from www.thingiverse.com/thing:492067

 

3D-print the provided STL file and insert a small piece sponge into the filament filter.

 

Poke a hole into the sponge and make sure the filament passes through and comes out at the other end.

 

Soak the sponge with a few drops of mineral oil (as for sewing machines, door hinges or bicycle chains).

 

Place the filament filter somewhere in between the spool and the extruder. If you have a plastic tube which guides the filament to extruder (such as a bowden solution) make sure you place the filter before the filament enters the tube.

 

See video for more information

 

- youtu.be/rMDEsrgzC9M

  

By Creative Tools

 

- Creative-Tools.com

- google.com/+CreativetoolsSe

- twitter.com/CreativeTools

- facebook.com/creativetools

- youtube.com/creativetools

- instructables.com/member/CreativeTools

A fully 3D-printable rotating stand for filament spools, designed to be easily made without the need for fasteners such as screws, nuts, shafts, glue, etc. Every single component in this spool holder comes right from your 3D printer's filament.

 

The spool holder's spindle is shaped to fit the vast majority of commonly used filament spools with shaft holes ranging from 16 mm to 62 mm in diameter. It is also compatible with spool-less filament coils.

 

The spindle which holds the spool's weight rotates on its own roller wheels, which makes it turn effortlessly.

 

The spool holder included an arm for filament guide tubes of both common sizes 1.75 mm and 3.0 mm. The arm also contains a pocket for inserting a piece of sponge which acts a a filament filter - thus keeping the filament clean and lubricated.

 

FEATURES

- Easy to 3D print

- Needs no glue or fasteners

- All parts can be 3D-printed

- Fits almost any filament spool size

- Has built-in filament filter!

- Can also hold spool-less filament coils

 

Next time you need a new filament spool holder, just 3D-print one! :)

 

INSTRUCTIONS

Please see video youtu.be/X6ArZeWYSZE

 

"Creative Tools

 

- Creative-Tools.com

- google.com/+CreativetoolsSe

- twitter.com/CreativeTools

- facebook.com/creativetools

- youtube.com/creativetools

- instructables.com/member/CreativeTools";

@ The Hairy Dog Derby

This small accessory can protect your FFF 3D printer filament from two common issues - cleaning and lubrication.

 

A sponge wipes the filament clean from any dust particles and prevents them clogging the extruder.

 

By dropping a few drops of common mineral oil on the sponge the filament passing through gets lubricated thus relieving the extruder motor from strain.

 

Lubrication is specially useful if the filament needs to travel through long tubes before it enters the extruder.

 

INSTRUCTIONS

 

Download the STL-file from www.thingiverse.com/thing:492067

 

3D-print the provided STL file and insert a small piece sponge into the filament filter.

 

Poke a hole into the sponge and make sure the filament passes through and comes out at the other end.

 

Soak the sponge with a few drops of mineral oil (as for sewing machines, door hinges or bicycle chains).

 

Place the filament filter somewhere in between the spool and the extruder. If you have a plastic tube which guides the filament to extruder (such as a bowden solution) make sure you place the filter before the filament enters the tube.

 

See video for more information

 

- youtu.be/rMDEsrgzC9M

  

By Creative Tools

 

- Creative-Tools.com

- google.com/+CreativetoolsSe

- twitter.com/CreativeTools

- facebook.com/creativetools

- youtube.com/creativetools

- instructables.com/member/CreativeTools

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testing some ABS from 3D Universe - worked great! These are printed on an Ultimaker 2+ Extended in ABS, 0.1mm layer height and a 0.4mm nozzle.

From Filament magazine Issue 3 - available worldwide from www.filamentmagazine.com

 

Photographer: David Davis

Model: Simon Ratzker

"Optomax" 220V 300W projector lightbulb filament

viewcam with Symmar 150 mm, f/32 3 sec.

one tungsten floodlight 500W

22.2.2000 polaroid 665 P/N (positive)

Technically it's not a real MakerBot filament spindle since it doesn't have the clear front - but it works great. I have done tons of builds without ever seeing / arranging / touching filament.

 

Find out more - 3dprinterforum.org/

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